| Literature DB >> 33317617 |
Gabriella Heruc1,2,3, Susan Hart4,5, Garalynne Stiles6, Kate Fleming7, Anjanette Casey8, Fiona Sutherland9,10, Shane Jeffrey9,11,12, Michelle Roberton13, Kim Hurst9,14,15.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Dietitians involved in eating disorder treatment are viewed as important members of the multidisciplinary team. However, the skills and knowledge that they require are not well characterised. Therefore, as part of a broader project to identify the key principles and clinical practice and training standards for mental health professionals and dietitians providing eating disorder treatment, the Australia & New Zealand Academy for Eating Disorders (ANZAED) sought to identify the key practice and training standards specific to dietitians. An expert working group of dietitians was convened to draft the initial dietetic standards. After expert review, feedback on the revised standards was then provided by 100 health professionals working within the eating disorder sector. This was collated into a revised version made available online for public consultation, with input received from treatment professionals, professional bodies and consumer/carer organisations. RECOMMENDATIONS: Dietitians providing treatment to individuals with an eating disorder should follow ANZAED's general principles and clinical practice standards for mental health professionals and dietitians. In addition, they should also be competent in the present eating disorder-specific standards based around the core dietetic skills of screening, professional responsibility, assessment, nutrition diagnosis, intervention, monitoring and evaluation.Entities:
Keywords: Dietetic; Dietitian; Eating disorder; Nutrition; Practice standards; Training; Treatment
Year: 2020 PMID: 33317617 PMCID: PMC7737344 DOI: 10.1186/s40337-020-00334-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Eat Disord ISSN: 2050-2974
Dietetic-specific clinical practice and training standards. The table below describes in detail the dietetic-specific practice and training standards that were summarised in the Recommendations section. It outlines the specific practice points recommended that dietitians be taught, understand and utilise to ensure safe and effective eating disorder treatment